问题 问答题 简答题

税务稽查的基本任务是什么?

答案

参考答案:

(1)、依照国家税收法律、法规,查处税收违法行为

(2)、保障税收收入

(3)、维护税收秩序,促进依法纳税

(4)、保证税法的实施

材料分析题

阅读材料,完成下列各题。

材料一:20世纪20年代末至30年代初的世界经济危机期间,美国极力推动文化产业发展,涌现出“老百汇”“好莱坞”等知名文化品牌,目前已成为世界第一文化产业大国;90年代亚洲金融危机期间。日本和韩国注重发展文化产业,迅速成为文化产业大国。有人据此认为:经济不景气成就文化产业发展是一条规律、当前,世界经济不景气,对于我国部分省市落实文化强省(市)发展战略,推动文化产业跨越式发展,也许是不可多得的“良机”。

材料二:在我国改革开放的早期,文化成为招商引资的重要媒介。近年来,在很多地方,文化不仅仅是“陪衬红花的绿叶”,而且直接登上了经济舞台并扮演着重要的角色,实现了从“文化搭台,经济唱戏”到“文化唱戏”的转变。据国家统计局的统计,2009年以来,我国文化产业发展势头良好,产值月均增幅达17%,其中电影、图书和舞台剧等,收入增长更高达20%。

(1)运用哲学知识,对材料一中“经济不景气成就文化产业发展是一条规律”的推断的合理性和严谨性作简要评析。

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(2)根据材料二,有人认为,从“文化搭台”到“文化唱戏”,体现了人们对文化功能认识的深化,你赞同这种看法吗?运用文化知识简要说明理由。

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(3)面对激烈的国际竞争,提升我国文化产业竞争力的意义何在?请对制定文化强省(市)战略提出方法论的建议。

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多项选择题

It took nearly eight years for the new heart drug BiDil to win approval from the Food and Drug Administration—and it won that approval only after its maker, a small company called NitroMed, repositioned it as a treatment earmarked for African Americans. But if NitroMed thought getting BiDil past the FDA was hard, wait until it tries marketing the drug to its target group. Even during its clinical trials, BiDil ran into resistance. Says Dr. Theodore Addai of Nashville’s Meharry Medical College, who had to enlist black patients for a 2001 trial: "We had to try to persuade them that this was not another Tuskegee. "
He’s referring to the infamous Tuskegee experiment, conducted by the U. S. government from the 1930s to the early ’70s, during which doctors denied nearly 400 black men in Alabama treatment for syphilis in order to observe the disease’s long-term effects. The scars left by Tuskegee are slow to heal in the African-American community, and many blacks remain deeply suspicious of anything that approaches the emotionally charged intersection of race and medicine.
The AIDS epidemic is a prime example. According to the Centers for Disease Control, blacks account for 50% of new HIV and AIDS cases in the U. S., although they represent only 13% of the population. African-American women are especially at risk; their annual AIDS case rate is 25 times that of white women. Citing those statistics, significant numbers of black Americans subscribe to various AIDS conspiracy theories. According to a poll conducted for the Rand Corp. last January, 53% of black Americans surveyed believe there is a cure for AIDS that is being withheld from the poor, and 15% believe the disease was created by the government in order to control the black population. Phil Wilson, director of the Black AIDS Institute, says such attitudes are hampering his work with antiretroviral drugs, "The most common thing we hear with AIDS drugs is, ’Oh, they’re going to experiment on you,’" he says. "The most cited example is the Tuskegee trials, even though most of us don’t even know what Tuskegee was."
Tuskegee aside, the discrepancies in medical care between blacks and whites in the U. S. are real and persistent and not explained by differences in economic status alone. In March 2002 a study by the Institute of Medicine at the National Academy Of Sciences found that even after controlling for such factors as income and insurance coverage, minorities in the U. S. routinely received lower-quality health care than whites. Matters were not improved in the early ’90s when some Governors and state officials tried to mandate the use of a newly approved five-year birth control device called Norplant as a way of curbing teenage pregnancy and reducing welfare costs, a campaign that instantly acquired racial overtones.
In that context, it’s not surprising that the idea behind BiDil—the first drug approved for a specific race—has been controversial from the start. The drug is actually a combination of two older, generic medicines. When it was first tested on the general population as a treatment for congestive heart failure—a gradual weakening of the heart-the FDA ruled that the results were not statistically significant. It was only when the drug was retested on patients who identified themselves as African Americans that tangible benefits emerged: a 43% reduction in the death rate and a 39% reduction in hospitalizations.
Critics point out that while the trials showed that BiDil saved lives, they failed to show whether the drug worked better in blacks than in other groups or that it worked only in blacks. "Race is a placeholder for something else," says Dr. Clyde Yancy, a cardiologist at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center and a BiDil investigator. "And that’s probably a mix of biomarkers, demographics and genes."
NitroMed declined to comment on its marketing strategy, but some doctors voiced concern that the company remains sensitive to African-American fears. "I hope they market BiDil with great caution and care," says Gary Puckrein, executive director of the National Minority Health Month foundation. "This really isn’t a race drug but a drug that works in specific populations for reasons we don’t yet understand.\

What is BiDil Why has it been controversial from the start